I am little unfamiliar with the 'if...then...fi' and the 'for' statements syntax.
Could anyone explain what the "$2/$fn" and "/etc/*release" in the code snippets below mean?...specifically on the use of the forward slash....and the asterisk...
if [ -f "$filename" ]; then
if [ ! -f "$2/$fn" ]; then
echo "$fn is missing from $2"
missing=$((missing + 1))
fi
fi
and
function system_info
{
if ls /etc/*release 1>/dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "<h2>System release info</h开发者_Python百科2>"
echo "<pre>"
for i in /etc/*release; do
# Since we can't be sure of the
# length of the file, only
# display the first line.
head -n 1 $i
done
uname -orp
echo "</pre>"
fi
} # end of system_info
...thx for the help...
/etc/*release
: here the *
will match any number of any characters, so any thing /etc/0release
, /etc/asdfasdfr_release
etc will be matched. Simply stated, it defined all the files in the /etc/
directory which ends with the string release
.
The $2
is the 2nd commandline argument to the shell script, and $fn
is some other shell variable. The "$2/$fn"
after the variable substitutions will make a string, and the [ -f "$2/$fn" ]
will test if the string formed after the substitution forms a path to a regular file which is specified by the -f
switch. If it is a regular file then the body of if
is executed.
In the for
loop the loop will loop for all the files ending with the string release
in the directory /etc
(the path). At each iteration i
will contain the next such file name, and for each iteration the first 1 line of the file is displayed with the head
command by getting the file name from variable i
within the body.
It is better to check the manual man bash
and for if condition check man test
. Here is a good resource: http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/
The forward slash is the path separator, and the *
is a file glob character. $2/$fn
is a path where $2
specifies the directory and $fn
is the filename. /etc/*release
expands to the space separated list of all the files in /etc
whose name ends in "release"
Dollar sign marks variable. The "-f" operator means "file exsists".
So,
[ -f "$filename" ]
checks if there is file named the same as value contained in $filename variable.
Simmilar, if we assume that $2 = "some_folder", and $fn = "some_file", expression
[ ! -f "$2/$fn" ]
returns true if file some_folder/some_file doesn't exsist.
Now, about asterisk - it marks "zero or more of any character(s)". So, expression:
for i in /etc/*release; do
will iterate trough all folders named by that pattern, for example: /etc/release, /etc/666release, /etc/wtf_release...
I hope this helps.
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